Sunday, April 19, 2026

REVIEW OF THE PLAY , "JAIKARA : THE LEGEND OF AMARNATH VAISHNAVI AND PRAJA PARISHAD "

                                                                             
                                             


















Jaikara: The Legend of Amarnath Vaishnavi And  Praja Parishad…A New Play

 

Jaikara: The Legend of Amarnath Vaishnavi & Praja Parishad is a powerful, emotionally resonant, and historically grounded play that skillfully weaves together personal memory, political struggle, and collective identity. It stands both as a biographical tribute to Pandit Amarnath Vaishnavi (Lalaji) and as a dramatic reconstruction of a significant chapter in the history of Jammu and Kashmir. The playwright’s achievement lies not merely in narrating events but in transforming them into a deeply human story that educates, commemorates, and inspires.

Scripted by Rohini Vaishnavi, the play opens with an intimate and highly effective narrative device: the voice of a granddaughter recalling her grandfather. This framing technique immediately humanises Lalaji, presenting him first as a warm, affectionate elder rather than a distant political figure. His charming remark, “I am a slave to my daughters… whatever they say, I will do!”, establishes emotional accessibility and familiarity. This grounding is crucial, as it draws the audience into a personal space before expanding into the wider historical narrative. Early references to his admiration for figures such as Maharana Pratap and Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj subtly foreshadow the values of courage and patriotism that would shape his life. The depiction of his childhood in Mastgarh, Jammu, is rendered with notable restraint and sensitivity. The quiet poignancy of the line, “She is not here… she has gone to God. I have not seen her,” conveys a profound sense of loss without resorting to melodrama. These early scenes, enriched by affectionate and lively exchanges with his elder brother, form the emotional foundation of the play. They reveal a thoughtful and morally aware child, encapsulated in his reflection: “Real strength does not lie in the sword, but in determination.” This line becomes a thematic thread running throughout the narrative.

As the play transitions into Lalaji’s youth and political awakening, the tone grows more intense and ideologically charged. Set against the backdrop of the Praja Parishad movement, the narrative captures a period defined by resistance and unity. The inclusion of national figures such as Prem Nath Dogra and Syama Prasad Mukherjee lends historical weight, while the presence of regional leaders, including Jagannath Kaul, D. N. Munshi, Moti Kaul, H. N. Nehru, Chaman Lal Gadoo, Hira Lal Chatta, Motilal Malla, and Hira Lal Bhatt, ensures a more inclusive and representative account of the movement.

The ideological core of the play is expressed through recurring slogans, particularly “One constitution, one symbol, one head,” which functions as a unifying motif. Lalaji’s spirited invocation, “Jaikara: Har Har Mahadev!”, resonates throughout as a symbol of courage, unity, and cultural identity, energising scenes of mobilisation and resistance.

The narrative moves across significant locations such as Pathankot and Delhi, reflecting the widening scope of the struggle. The arrest scenes are especially compelling. Lalaji’s declaration, “I am not a thief or a smuggler. I am a teacher,” asserts dignity and moral authority, while his calm defiance—“I am sitting right here. I am not afraid, and I am not weak”—reinforces his unwavering courage. The courtroom sequence stands out as a highlight, where the question, “Was this meeting secret, or was it public?”, becomes a decisive turning point. The scene relies on clarity of dialogue to generate tension, offering both intellectual satisfaction and emotional release. Despite the gravity of its subject, the play incorporates moments of gentle humour that deepen characterisation. Lalaji’s remark, “Should I go to the police station barefoot?”, adds wit and humanity, preventing the narrative from becoming overly sombre.

The play reaches the greatest emotional depth in its portrayal of the post-1990 exodus from the Kashmir Valley. These scenes are handled with dignity and restraint, avoiding sensationalism while conveying the profound trauma of displacement. Here, Lalaji emerges not merely as a political activist but as a compassionate humanitarian. His work in refugee camps in Jammu, including Muthi and Purkhoo, forms the moral centre of the narrative. His statement, “All Kashmiri Pandits are my family,” encapsulates a philosophy of service reflected in his tireless efforts to provide relief, shelter, education, and dignity. The inclusion of administrative and organisational figures such as Vijay Bakaya, Kedar Nath Sahani, and Indresh Kumar enhances the authenticity of this phase, highlighting the collaborative framework within which Lalaji operated.

Thematically, the play explores identity, resilience, sacrifice, and the importance of historical memory. It emphasises that true leadership is defined not only by resistance but also by service in times of crisis. Structurally ambitious, the play spans several decades and multiple locations. While this breadth occasionally creates density, the use of narration ensures coherence. The varied settings, from domestic spaces to protest sites, courtrooms, prisons, and refugee camps, offer rich theatrical possibilities.

The conclusion returns to the granddaughter’s voice, reinforcing the idea that history endures through memory and storytelling. The final message—that future generations must honour and carry forward this legacy of sacrifice and service—is both clear and deeply resonant. In sum, Jaikara: The Legend of Amarnath Vaishnavi And Praja Parishad is a moving and significant work of theatre that successfully preserves Lalaji’s legacy with dignity, depth, and enduring relevance.

THE STAGE PERFORMANCE OF THE PLAY

The play, staged on 19 April 2026 at Abhinav Theatre, Jammu, unfolds as both homage and historical meditation, offering a deeply evocative portrayal of the life and legacy of Amar Nath Vaishnavi. From his modest beginnings in Mastgarh, Jammu, to his emergence as a figure of moral resilience and public conscience, the narrative charts not merely a life, but a story  rooted in service, sacrifice, and unadorned conviction. The production carries a quiet gravitas, allowing history to breathe through performance rather than overwhelming it with spectacle. At its ideological core lies the “Ek Vidhan, Ek Nishan, Ek Pradhan” agitation launched by the Praja Parishad in the 1950s. The play treats this moment not as a rhetorical flourish, but as a crucible in which Vaishnavi’s character is tested and revealed. The staging resists simplification; instead, it captures the tension between political aspiration and personal cost. His imprisonments in Gurdaspur, Ambala, Shimla and Delhi are rendered with restraint, their emotional force emerging through suggestion rather than overt dramatisation, an approach that lends the narrative a certain dignity.

The play’s most affecting passages lie beyond the arena of political agitation. In its depiction of the upheavals of the 1990s, the narrative shifts register, moving from the public to the intimate. Here, Vaishnavi appears not as an emblem, but as a presence; steadfast, humane, and quietly transformative. His efforts to alleviate the suffering of a displaced and fractured community form the moral axis of the production. The portrayal of him as a Karmayogi is not merely declarative; it is earned through a series of moments that reveal compassion in action. His vocation as a drawing teacher becomes symbolically resonant, suggesting an individual who sought, even amidst disorder, to restore form, balance, and meaning.

Rohini Vaishnavi’s writing demonstrates a commendable commitment to both memory and meaning. Ravinder Sharma’s direction ensures a measured pacing and coherence, allowing the text to find its own rhythm. Vinay Pandita, in the titular role, offers a performance marked by restraint and inner strength, eschewing theatricality in favour of a more contemplative presence. Himangini Moza, as the Sutradhar, provides a graceful narrative bridge, though at moments one senses the potential for greater interpretative depth in her interventions. Suman Pandita’s portrayal of a displaced sufferer stands out for its emotional authenticity, grounding the play’s broader themes in lived experience. The child artists contribute with admirable confidence, their presence lending a sense of continuity and hope. Bharati Kaul’s costumes are thoughtfully conceived, enhancing the visual texture without drawing undue attention to themselves, while Rohit Bhat’s design reflects a careful attention to spatial and aesthetic detail. The makeup by Shammi Damir and the lighting by Pankaj Sharma were particularly impressive. The recurring chant of “Jaikara: Har Har Mahadev” functions as more than a cultural refrain; it becomes a dramaturgical device, punctuating the narrative with a sense of continuity between the spiritual and the temporal.

The production succeeds in opening a space for reflection on history, identity, and the quiet endurance of individuals who shape collective memory. In its finest moments, the play transcends biography, becoming instead a meditation on what it means to live a life of principle. It leaves the audience not only moved, but also contemplative, inviting them to consider the fragile interplay between personal conviction and historical circumstance.

 

(Avtar Mota )



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Friday, April 17, 2026

OUR VITASTA: FROM SACRED CHANTS OF RIG VEDA TO THE VERSES OF ALI SARDAR JAFRI


                                                                             





Long before she found her lyrical self-expression in the cadences of Ali Sardar Jafri, the river was revered as Vitastā, a sacred current remembered in the Rig Veda, where she is invoked among the life-giving rivers of the ancient land:

इमं मे गङ्गे यमुने सरस्वति शुतुद्रि स्तोमं सचता परुष्ण्या
असिक्न्या मरुद्वृधे वितस्तयाऽर्जीकिये शृणुह्या सुषोमया

imaṃ me gaṅge yamune sarasvati śutudri stomaṃ sacatā paruṣṇyā |
asiknyā marudvṛdhe vitastayā ’rjīkīye śṛṇuhyā suṣomayā ||

In this ancient invocation, Vitastā is not merely a river, but a presence; heard, praised, and entreated as a living force within a sacred landscape.

By the age of the Mahabharata, her waters are woven into the spiritual journeys of humankind:

गङ्गां सरस्वतीं चैव सिन्धुं यमुनातथा
वितस्तामथ विपाशां स्नात्वा पापैः प्रमुच्यते

gaṅgāṃ sarasvatīṃ caiva sindhuṃ ca yamunāṃ tathā |
vitastām atha vipāśāṃ ca snātvā pāpaiḥ pramucyate ||

Here, Vitastā becomes a path to purification, her flow a medium through which the burdens of existence are gently washed away.

And in the Nilamata Purana, she emerges as the very soul of Kashmir, born of divine command:

वितस्ता नाम या देवी सर्वपापप्रणाशिनी
शिवाज्ञया विनिःसृता लोकानां हितकाम्यया

vitastā nāma yā devī sarvapāpapraṇāśinī |
śivājñayā viniḥsṛtā lokānāṃ hitakāmyayā ||

Thus, at the behest of Shiva, she descends—not merely to flow, but to create, to sustain, to remember. Across these layered traditions, Vitastā flows, ancient yet ever-renewing, known today as the Jhelum River. A witness to myth, memory, and history alike, she is at once scripture, landscape, and song.And when this ancient river, after centuries of being invoked, revered, and remembered, at last finds her modern poetic voice, she speaks through the imagination of Ali Sardar Jafri, becoming not merely a subject of verse, but its speaking self:

Maanind joo-e-zindagi shaam o sahar behtaa huun mein
Har dam ravaan, har dam davaan, har dam jawaan rahtaa huun mein

Like the stream of life, through dusk and dawn I flow;
At every moment moving, striving, forever young, I grow.

Vaadi mein lehraata hua
Sabze se ithlaata hua
Sau pech o kham khaata hua
Hanstaa hua gaata hua

Through the valley I sway and wander,
In the green I preen and ponder,
In a hundred winding turns I glide,
Laughing, singing as I ride.

Maujon ki zufein kholta
Qatron ke moti roltaa
Maashooqa-e-Kashmir ke
Pehloo mein itraata hua

I loosen the tresses of my waves,
I scatter pearls my spray engraves,
Beside my beloved ( Kashmir) , I remain,
Adorned with grace, with tender refrain.

Kheiton ke daaman mein yahaan
Baagon ke saaye mein vahaan
Apni sharaab-e-naab ke
Sagar ko chhalkaata hua

In the lap of fields I linger here,
In orchards’ shade I reappear,
The pure wine of my being I pour,
A brimming, life-bestowing store.

Maanind joo-e-zindagi shaam o sahar behtaa huun mein
Har dam ravaan, har dam davaan, har dam jawaan rahtaa huun mein

Like the stream of life, through dusk and dawn I flow;
At every moment moving, striving,forever young I grow.

Thus, from the sacred utterance of the Rig Veda to the epic memory of the Mahabharata, from the living myth of the Nilamata Purana to the lyrical self-expression of Ali Sardar Jafri, the river endures, Vitastā, Jhelum, speaking at last in her own voice:

I flow. I remember. I become…

 

(Avtar Mota )

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Thursday, April 16, 2026

SAHITYA AKADEMI AWARD SYSTEM

                                                                      



The Sahitya Akademi Award System

The Sahitya Akademi has long occupied a position of singular importance in India’s literary landscape, serving as a national institution dedicated to the promotion of literary excellence across the country’s diverse linguistic traditions. Through its publications, translation initiatives, and recognition of authors, it has significantly contributed to the preservation and enrichment of Indian literature. However, notwithstanding this distinguished legacy, the credibility of its Award System has increasingly come under scrutiny within scholarly and literary circles. Concerns regarding the opacity of selection procedures, the composition of evaluative bodies, and the consistency of literary standards have given rise to doubts about whether the awards invariably reflect the highest merit. These apprehensions do not diminish the institution’s stature; rather, they underscore the urgency of strengthening its evaluative mechanisms to ensure that its recognitions remain beyond reproach.

1.    Structural Deficiencies in the Existing Committee System

The prevailing committee-based framework of the Sahitya Akademi awards exhibits structural deficiencies that risk compromising the integrity of literary recognition. The concentration of evaluative authority within relatively insular literary circles fosters conditions conducive to subjectivity, intellectual conformity, and, at times, patronage networks. Such a configuration may privilege affiliation over merit, thereby weakening the foundational principle of recognising literary excellence. A growing body of critical opinion within literary discourse indicates that some works honoured by the Akademi do not consistently withstand rigorous scholarly scrutiny or meet the highest standards of literary merit. Conversely, several authors of notable originality and intellectual depth remain overlooked, pointing to systemic lapses in evaluative judgment. These concerns underscore the need for a comprehensive re-examination of institutional design.

 

2.    Reconstitution of Jury Composition through Cross-Linguistic Scholarship

A central reform must address the composition of selection committees. It is proposed that each jury include two eminent scholars from the concerned language alongside at least three distinguished scholars drawn from other Indian linguistic traditions. Such a pluralistic structure would introduce comparative literary perspectives and reduce the risk of parochial judgment. In a multilingual literary culture such as India’s, cross-linguistic scholarly engagement is essential. It ensures that works are assessed against broader aesthetic and intellectual benchmarks, preventing insular preferences from overshadowing genuine excellence.

 

In  Institutionalisation of Translation for Comparative Evaluation

To enable meaningful participation by scholars beyond the source language, all shortlisted works should be translated into English and, where feasible, into one or two widely used Indian languages. AI tools can be quite helpful. These translations must adhere to high standards of fidelity and literary quality. The availability of such translations would allow evaluators to transcend linguistic barriers and apply comparative frameworks, thereby strengthening objectivity. This process would also help identify cases where works of limited merit may have been elevated due to restricted evaluative access, while ensuring that deserving yet linguistically marginalised voices receive due recognition.

 

4.    Codification of Transparent Evaluation Parameters and Ethical Safeguards

The Akademi should formalise and publicly articulate clear evaluative criteria, including originality, stylistic innovation, thematic depth, cultural resonance, and enduring literary significance. Jury members should be required to submit written appraisals aligned with these parameters, ensuring intellectual accountability. At the same time, robust conflict-of-interest protocols must be instituted. These should mandate full disclosure of personal or professional affiliations and require recusal where necessary. Regular rotation of jury members would further prevent the consolidation of influence and promote institutional neutrality.

 

5.  Oversight, Transparency, and Mechanisms of Accountability

An independent oversight body comprising senior scholars of unimpeachable integrity should be constituted to review procedural adherence without encroaching upon academic autonomy. Transparency measures, such as the publication of shortlists, anonymised jury observations, and reasoned justifications for final selections, would significantly enhance public trust. Additionally, a limited yet structured mechanism for procedural review should be established to address potential lapses. Such safeguards would reinforce institutional credibility while preserving the independence of literary judgement.

 Conclusion

The Sahitya Akademi’s Award system should align itself with the principles of scholarly rigour, transparency, and equitable representation. The Ministry of Culture should undertake a comprehensive review of the present procedures to ensure that literary merit, rather than affiliation or influence, remains the sole criterion of recognition. Only through such reforms can the institution fully uphold its mandate and ensure that no writer of genuine distinction remains unacknowledged. The Sahitya Akademi Award remains one of India’s most respected literary honours, but like any award system, it reflects both literary merit and institutional dynamics. That’s why debates often arise after announcements; some celebrate the choices, while others argue that more deserving works were ignored.  Interestingly, these debates aren’t necessarily a weakness. They often signal that literature is alive and contested. When people argue over whether a writer or book deserved recognition, it usually means there’s a vibrant  culture paying attention.

( Avtar Mota )

 



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Monday, April 13, 2026

MY LATEST POEM ' I AM PERFORMING AN UNENDING HOMA '

                                                                               

This is my latest poem:

( I Am Performing An Unending Homa )
Nature moves on
with a strange, merciful indifference,
as though my discontent
were never written into its design.
Night dissolves into dawn.
Evening descends like a lullaby,
and the world yields,
softly, completely, to sleep.
But not I.
O Lord,
Why have You inscribed
this cruel insignia of wakefulness
upon my forehead?
Through day and night
I perform an unending Homa,
A sacrificial fire
Without altar,
Without a priest,
Without end.
It does not sanctify.
It consumes.
And I,
Alone before it,
Stand trembling,
Compelled to whisper ‘Swaha’
again and again:
“I offer this. I surrender this.”
until my own voice
begins to sound like ash.
What offering is this
that never fulfils the ritual?
How much of myself
must I cast into this fire?
What fire is this
that refuses completion,
that withholds
the mercy of ending?
Have You turned Your gaze away
that sleep has forgotten my name?
Or am I bound
by some unseen decree
to feed this flame endlessly,
To break myself into fragments,
To offer breath after breath,
Hope after hope,
Until nothing remains
but a handful of ash,
And even that
left unclaimed by the wind?
Tell me,
Will there be a Poorn-ahuti,
That final, merciful surrender,
When all this anguish is gathered
and ended in a single grace?
Or is this my fate:
A ritual without completion,
without release?
Is this my trial
or my punishment?
Am I being purified
or slowly erased?
I do not know.
I do not know.
I do not know.

(Avtar Mota )


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Based on a work at http:\\autarmota.blogspot.com\.

Sunday, April 12, 2026

GOODBYE TO ASHA BHOSALE: THE QUEEN OF MUSICAL VERSATILITY

                                                                 

          
GOODBYE TO ASHA BHOSALE: THE QUEEN OF MUSICAL VERSATILITY

The passing of Asha Bhosle at the age of 92 invites not merely an outpouring of grief, but a more sustained meditation on the ontology of voice itself—on how certain timbres outlive the bodies that produce them, and how song, in rare instances, becomes a durable form of cultural memory. Admitted to Breach Candy Hospital in Mumbai on April 11 following extreme exhaustion and a chest infection, she exits the material world; yet her sonic presence persists, diffused across time, inhabiting both private recollection and collective consciousness.
To situate Asha Bhosle within a linear historiography of Indian cinema would be to diminish her significance. She was not simply a participant in the evolution of film music; she was one of its principal agents of transformation. Beginning in the late 1950s, her voice emerged as a site of formal innovation, absorbing, reconfiguring, and rearticulating diverse musical idioms. Her collaborations with R. D. Burman, in particular, may be understood as a paradigmatic moment in South Asian popular music: a confluence where jazz harmonies, Latin rhythms, and indigenous melodic structures coalesced into a new auditory language. These were not merely compositions, but interventions, reshaping the epistemic boundaries of what playback singing could signify.
Her artistry resists reductive categorisation. To describe her as “versatile,” though accurate, is critically insufficient. She functioned instead as a liminal figure, occupying and traversing the thresholds between genres, affects, and performative registers. She was at once unconventional and maverick, yet anchored by an unmistakable humanism. Her voice carried an affective density that allowed it to oscillate between irony and sincerity, eroticism and restraint, melancholy and exuberance, often within the same melodic phrase.
This complexity is perhaps most evident in the interpretive depth she brought to individual compositions. The subdued invitation of Aaiye Meherbaan gestures toward a philosophy of seduction that is as much interior as it is performative; Mera Kuch Saamaan functions almost as an aural palimpsest, where memory, absence, and temporality are layered with remarkable subtlety. In Dil Cheez Kya Hai, she engages with the semiotics of classical desire, rendering it with poise and deliberation.
Yet to confine her to introspective registers would be to overlook another equally significant dimension of her oeuvre. In songs such as Yeh Mera Dil and Piya Tu Ab To Aaja, one encounters a performative modernity, where voice becomes corporeal, rhythmic, and sensorially immediate. The playful cadence of O Mere Sona Re Sona Re exemplifies her ability to infuse lightness with technical precision, while the husky tonalities of Aao Na Gale Lagao Na, Dum Maro Dum, Inn Aankhon ki Masti Ke, Chain Se Hum Ko Kabhi, and Jawani Janeman reveal a nuanced manipulation of breath and texture that redefined vocal sensuality and human moods in Hindi cinema. I am always amazed by her song "Chain Se Hum Ko Kabhi". There’s clear heartbreak in her voice, but it never becomes melodramatic. You hear a complaint mixed with lingering love. In the song, Ye Kya Jagah Hai Doston from Umrao Jaan (1981), Asha Ji doesn’t sing this like a performance; she sighs it like a private thought. The weariness and wonder in her voice make you feel Umrao’s exile without a single extra note. She treats Shahryar’s lyrics with a poet’s care, stretching, Jagah, and softening,doston, so the words feel like they’re dissolving into the room. The song sits low in her range, and she uses that husky, lived-in texture to carry grief that’s elegant, not melodramatic. That’s why it still haunts.

Though Asha Bhosle is canonically situated within the filmic and cabaret idioms of post-Independence Hindi cinema, her interventions in the devotional sphere constitute a significant—if comparatively underexamined- counterpoint to her predominantly secular oeuvre. Her devotional recordings traverse a notably pluralistic terrain: from film bhajans such as Tora Man Darpan Kehlaye (from Kaajal), Payoji Maine Ram Ratan Dhan Payo, and to pieces like Saancha Tera Naam( duet with her sister Usha ), wherein she deploys a thumri-inflected microtonal sensibility to articulate Madhura-bhakti. Her engagement extends beyond the Hindi film idiom into Marathi abhangas associated with saints such as Sant Dnyaneshwar and Tukaram, where her diction largely preserves the traditional rhythmic austerity of the form whilst subtly modernising vocal timbre through studio reverberation and orchestral layering. Her renditions of Sikh devotional compositions, such as Re Mun Aisso Kar Sanyaasa( a poem of Guru Gobind Singh ), Satguru Aayo Sharan Tihari, Prabh Ju to ke Laaj and Mere Sahib Mere Sahib, together with several private devotional albums released during the 1980s and 1990s, are particularly instructive for ethnomusicological inquiry. They illuminate the negotiation between classical vocal idioms, mediated devotional expression, and the evolving technologies of sound recording, even if such works remain peripheral to her principal musical identity.

We Kashmiris remain indebted to her for singing two most popular songs in chaste Kashmiri: Rasul Mir's , Laalas vantai su sawaal saalas anna tan baliye( tell that beloved my complaint and bring him to the feast ) and Shamas Faqir's,  Ha Ashqa tsooro rashq kar thas dewaana tai panun aasith chhukh tse lagaan begaana tai ( O love thief, I madly envy you, why you behave like a stranger, arn't you my darling ). These songs were recorded by Akashvani Srinagar in the 1960s when she was on a private visit to Kashmir.

Importantly, her contribution was not limited to aesthetic innovation alone; it also possessed a sociocultural dimension. At a historical moment when Indian society was negotiating modernity, urbanisation, and shifting moral frameworks, Asha Bhosle’s voice became an acoustic emblem of these transitions. She gave sonic form to desire that was no longer entirely coded or restrained; she articulated a femininity that was playful, assertive, and self-aware. In doing so, she did not merely reflect changing sensibilities; she actively participated in their construction.
Equally, she remained the voice of celebration. Her more buoyant renditions carried an infectious rhythmic vitality that made generations of listeners, particularly the youth, tap their feet, inhabit the beat, and momentarily dissolve into the sheer physicality of music. In these instances, her art transcended interpretation and entered the realm of embodied experience, where listening itself became a form of movement.
Thus, Asha Bhosle’s legacy demands to be read not simply as a catalogue of songs, but as a complex cultural text, one that traverses aesthetics, affect, and history. She did not merely sing within the frameworks available to her; she expanded them, destabilised them, and reconstituted them in new and unexpected ways. If playback singing in India today possesses a certain elasticity of form and expression, it is in no small measure due to her interventions.
To invoke the epithet “Queen of Versatility” is, therefore, to gesture toward only a fraction of her significance. She was, more profoundly, a theorist of voice, an artist who understood, intuitively and instinctively, that sound could carry not just melody, but meaning; not just rhythm, but thought.
What remains in her absence is not silence, but resonance: a dispersed, enduring presence that continues to inhabit the interstices of memory and listening. In her passing, we are reminded of a paradox central to artistic existence, that the human voice, though ephemeral in its production, can, in its most transcendent articulations, attain a form of permanence that defies time itself.
(Avtar Mota )

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